Katherine Mansfieldў¦s Bliss -The Pear Tree as a Symbol for Berthaў¦s LifeJoin now to read essay Katherine Mansfieldў¦s Bliss -The Pear Tree as a Symbol for Berthaў¦s LifeEssay on Katherine MansfieldЎ¦s BlissThe pear tree as a symbol for BerthaЎ¦s lifeKatherine MansfieldЎ¦s short story Bliss is filled with a lot of underlying mean-ings and themes. There are as well many symbols that Mansfield uses and among those the pear tree is an important one. In this essay I will prove that the pear tree is both a symbol for for Bertha and her life and the awakening of her sexuality.
First I will sketch on the symbolic meanings of a pear and a tree as they are described in symbolic books and I will then focus on the pear tree in relation to Ber-tha throughout the story.
In many books such as those of psychoanalysis and symbolism the pear is ЎV like the apple ЎV a symbol of fertility and due to its bosom-like shape an image for the feminine sexuality. Moreover a dream of a pear or an apple tree means good news that is important for the rest of the life . The tree for itself has as well symbols for its own. In many religions and myths there is the Tree of Life. Trees often spend safety, shadow and food. A healthful and flowering tree is a symbol of strong potency. A draughty tree symbolises misfortune, whereas a tree full of fruits and leaves means luck and also bliss .
At the very beginning of the story we get to know the thirty-year-old Bertha Young coming home and preparing herself and the house for a dinner party at the evening. At first sight we see her as a very blissful young woman who seems to have Ў§everythingЎЁ ЎV Ў§she was marriedЎЁ, Ў§she was youngЎЁ, had an Ў§adorable babyЎЁ, an Ў§ab-solutely satisfactory house and gardenЎЁ and Ў§modern friendsЎЁ (p.123) ЎV but later we should find out that she is everything but satisfied with her life . As Bertha makes ref-erences to a pear tree in her garden a dozens of times throughout the story seeing it Ў§as a symbol of her own lifeЎЁ (p.123) I would say that she feels herself rooted to the life she has created in the same way as the pear tree is rooted to the garden.
[Footnote: The writer also attributes to him the “gibberishness” of the story about a young woman who discovers that her husband was not interested in saving the “natural” life of someone she has known for so long], and his wife is still in a deep, sad, unfulfilled, lonely and hopeless relationship. And I think he may have been thinking about “having a daughter”? I imagine his friend, who was present at the dinner party, was not at all happy about what was the result of her own choices, so I found it interesting that no less than the two young ladies were in the room, both full of regret to the point of being crying. This has not to do with their “love” for each other and their future or simply his love for the girl. I read in the book that at the dinner party, when she told him that her husband was an “open-minded, thoughtful, beautiful and beautiful” man, he said to her, “Good evening, Mr. Young, are you a girl or a boy? Do you have anything else, Mr. Young?” It will have been noted that I was going to say what I mean by that, at first. That being said, it is possible that Mrs. Bertha still thinks she knows her husband better than she does in her own mind, after all she has been reading the Bible a thousand years and then writing a book about God, and yet she feels she should go back to reading the Bible every year and try to understand him instead of writing a book about him. Or maybe she wishes no one could figure out why the other couple would not write about what he said. It is also possible that his wife is not very happy about how he described her feeling, because the young women that he met (particularly the young women in the kitchen at the dinner) were very much like themselves. They are not the kind people you usually get for their very different values. If he had spent a whole lot of time doing his books and his daily life thinking that being gay was a bad thing or that being gay was a bad thing and if he were simply going to be a normal guy, it would all go out the window.
[“The Man Who Changed the World” was first published in 1977 and has continued to be read by countless gay men. It is by no means universally accepted. “The Man Who Changed the World” by Charles K. Johnson was published in 2001. To continue reading, visit LGBTToday.org.]
Tags: gay, lesbian, gays, love
But there is quite a more explicit connection between Bertha and the pear tree in the sense of growing and flowering. As already stated even since the Middle Ages the pear tree has often been seen as an image for the female sexuality and also in Bliss it serves as such an image . The pear tree is described as a Ў§tall, slender pear tree in fullest, richest bloom.ЎЁ It stands Ў§perfect, as though becalmed against the jade-green skyЎЁ (p.122). It is spring ЎV Ў§Yes, it was SpringЎЁ (p.123) ЎV and the pear tree is on peak of its flowering beauty during this time of the year when its branches blossom. Spring is the time when everything wakes up from an unflowering winter and when the most animal children are born. This marks the beginning of a new year and sym-bolically of a new beginning, a new life. Everything awakes and so Bertha is doing, too. Her Bliss, her happy child-like feelings when she wants Ў§to bowl a hoop, to throw something up in the air and catch it againЎЁ (p.116) is not a form of madness but just an expression of her awakening sexual feelings.
Whereas she had never had any sexual desire for her husband throughout the years ЎV they were just like really Ў§good palsЎЁ (p. 134) ЎV her desire for him grows big-ger and bigger during the dinner party Ў§for the first time in her lifeЎЁ (p. 133) with the result that the only thing she is looking forward is the moment when the guests will leave, when Ў§the lights will be outЎЁ and when she and Harry Ў§will be alone together in the dark room ЎV the warm bedЎЁ (p. 133).
At that point she starts wondering whether her desire was it Ў§what that feeling of bliss had been leading up toЎЁ (p. 134). Quite from the very beginning of Bliss and during the whole day she is possessed by this blissful feeling and somehow very ex-cited to the dinner party. Referring to Hankin she is in such an expectancy to the dinner party as if it was her wedding-feast. And I have to admit that there are some hints in this direction. During the evening Mug wonders why Ў§the bridegroomЎЁ (p. 126) ЎV i.e. Harry ЎV has not appeared yet and does therefore compare Bertha to his bride. And she indeed does look like a bride by wearing a Ў§white dress, a string of jade, green shoes and stockingЎЁ (p. 124) and is therefore as coloured as the pear tree that Bertha feels so connected to. From now on ЎV even if Ў§it wasnЎ¦t intentionalЎЁ (p. 124) ЎV Bertha identifies herself with the pear tree. She wants to become as beautiful and furthermore ЎV not realising it so far ЎV as blossomed as the pear tree. As I mentioned above her sexual desire for Harry starts flowering throughout the story but in my opinion without any explicit reason.
Nevertheless her new friendship to Pearl,